Lee is not only a great rebounder, but he's also an underrated passer. A better passer than his stats would reflect. That really helps when you have guys like Curry, Thompson and Barnes. I like Lee a lot and would hold onto him, but thats not to say that I wouldn't move him for a player that I think would really improve this team. I just don't see that player out there.

BayAreaHoopz wrote:Lee is not only a great rebounder, but he's also an underrated passer. A better passer than his stats would reflect. That really helps when you have guys like Curry, Thompson and Barnes. I like Lee a lot and would hold onto him, but thats not to say that I wouldn't move him for a player that I think would really improve this team. I just don't see that player out there.

Blackfoot wrote:If we are doing positional argument as importance to winning in the playoffs, the most important position in the past and now has been SF.

SF is the most important position.

Durant and melo think otherwise, Prince in Memphis hasntt carried them like their post player. If you thinking Bron then thats bron who players all over the floor. I still say post because of the effectivness of the above mentioned.

Blackfoot wrote:One playoffs doesn't change history or past results. This is one year. SF absolutely has the biggest impact on the game.

I assume you're basing this on a stat, so I'm gonna need to hear it. Cause I'm a traditionalist when it comes to this subject. The post and the point are the most important slots to me. SF is versatile but a team without a center can't win in the playoffs... without arguably the greatest player to ever exist (LeBron), but again, the Heat are the exception not the rule. And that pertains to everything about them.

Blackfoot wrote:One playoffs doesn't change history or past results. This is one year. SF absolutely has the biggest impact on the game.

I assume you're basing this on a stat, so I'm gonna need to hear it. Cause I'm a traditionalist when it comes to this subject. The post and the point are the most important slots to me. SF is versatile but a team without a center can't win in the playoffs... without arguably the greatest player to ever exist (LeBron), but again, the Heat are the exception not the rule. And that pertains to everything about them.

This is something new I found. Apparently having a center on the road is more important but a SF is more important overall. Sample sizes are big enough where this is true, but also I am not sure why a C is more important on the road.

warriorsstepup wrote:Why I don't get too much into advanced stats. Don't know any sf that has lead their team to NBA champs the last 10 years, Bron is in his class of his own, who can play any position on the floor.

Last 24 years, only NBA finals MVP that played SF, Bron, and Paul Pierce.

It's important to note it's the stretch SF that's the most important position, not just any SF. Which is where I should have clarified. That's my bad. Still, it's the most important.

warriorsstepup wrote:Why I don't get too much into advanced stats. Don't know any sf that has lead their team to NBA champs the last 10 years, Bron is in his class of his own, who can play any position on the floor.

Last 24 years, only NBA finals MVP that played SF, Bron, and Paul Pierce.

It's important to note it's the stretch SF that's the most important position, not just any SF. Which is where I should have clarified. That's my bad. Still, it's the most important.

Like I said only Bron and Pierce the only finals MVP the last 24 years, that is how I know the SF is not the most important as you claim.